Audaciter said:I have ordered upgrade motors for my Phantom, because DJI quality control is terrible. The prop shafts are different sizes on
all 4 motors.
I have a little over 1 hour flight time, and the bearings have gone out on one motor.
I plan on running 9' carbon fiber props, and the Phantom is starting to get heavy with the GoPro, gimbal, and it will have an
fpv system, with osd.
I am getting T-motor MN2214 anti-gravity motors , which are claiming a 10% increase in power and 8% more efficient.
I've already pulled the original motors out, just waiting on the new ones.
Audaciter said:tanasit, I mean the shaft that the props mount to are all different thicknesses. I confirmed it with dial calipers.
Some owners are lucky and get good quality motors, with tight specs, and others got the "night shift" variety.
I'm not complaining, even though I only got a little over 1 hour of flight time over a manicured grass field, before the bearings
went out on one motor.
You know there is a problem when sellers on eBay are selling Phantom motor rebuild kits, and bearings.
Anyway, like I said previously, my Phantom is going to be heavy so I am upgrading to the T-Motor anti-gravity motors, and
running 9" carbon fiber props.
Audaciter said:Appleboy, What you want are 3.5mm male and female connectors. You can find them at a hobby shop, but will pay too
much.
Order at least a couple of 10 packs, as you will need 12. Watch a video on youtube on how to solder the bullet connectors.
Be sure to use flux on everything.
Audaciter said:The trouble of using bullet connectors on the Phantom, is the extremely tight space under the shell. Plus you have the shell
mounting post through the ESC, with a metal plate in the shell to run the screw into.
Trying to get the wires bent with bullet connectors would be a major pain in the butt.
Also when you fill the solder cups on the connectors, the combined weight is incredible.
Do yourself a favor, and either solder your wires to the ends of the ones coming off the ESC, or de-solder those leads,
and install your motor wires directly to the ESC. After checking motor spinning direction of course.
P.S If you solder your motor leads directly to the ESC, install them straight up off the board like the factory does.
I tried to get fancy, and have my wires lay flat, and my ESC caught fire when I armed the motors.
(Learn from my mistakes grasshopper).
I had the same problem with one of my motor s going out with less than 10hours flying time on it the bearing went outI have ordered upgrade motors for my Phantom, because DJI quality control is terrible. The prop shafts are different sizes on
all 4 motors.
I have a little over 1 hour flight time, and the bearings have gone out on one motor.
I plan on running 9' carbon fiber props, and the Phantom is starting to get heavy with the GoPro, gimbal, and it will have an
fpv system, with osd.
I am getting T-motor MN2214 anti-gravity motors , which are claiming a 10% increase in power and 8% more efficient.
I've already pulled the original motors out, just waiting on the new ones.
Which AC? If it’s a phantom 3 the motors will need to have the same specs as OEM or you may need to connect a JTAG debugger to edit the parameters for the onboard MCU in the ESC’s. In any event max speed is determined by pitch angle which is limited by the flight controller, you won’t go faster no matter what you do with the motors.I'm looking to upgrade my motors and would love some feedback on what motors are the best and not too costly for speed and power increases
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